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Research Resources

The main resources are held in the Music and Multi-Media Section of the Matheson Library. Enquiries should be directed to Rosa Dudek and, for reference enquiries, to Jackie Waylen. Researchers can also visit the site http://www.lib.monash.edu.au/services/research.html which is a useful online research service provided by the library. Other resources are held in the Monash Music Archive located in the School of Music , enquiries to Bronia Kornhauser.

The Monash Music Archive

The Monash Music Archive contains valuable research materials including field recordings (many of which are annotated), rare musical instruments, theses, scores, sheet music, publications, artifacts, maps, memorabilia, photographs and slides from Southeast Asia (especially Indonesia, Malaysia, Thailand, Laos, and the Philippines), South Asia (especially North India and Srilanka), East Asia (especially Japan), Aboriginal/Indigenous Australia (especially the Pitjantjara area), and Jewish Asia and Australia. Housed on the ground floor of the Performing Arts Centre (Building 68), its contents include the Sumatra Music Archive, the Australian Archive of Jewish Music, and the Asian Music Archive.

Gamelan Orchestras

The Asian Music Archive holds the beautiful-sounding but strange-looking Gamelan Digul , a Javanese gamelan slendro-pelog made in 1926 from any materials to hand (including kitchen utensils and old doors) by the Solo court musician Pontjopangrawit in the notorious Dutch prison camp for anti-colonial political prisoners in Digul (Papua). The gamelan soothed the hearts of its players in exile throughout the 1930s and early 1940s, when they and the gamelan were transported by the Dutch to Australia as they took refuge from the Japanese invaders, and where they worked with Australians toward achieving Indonesia 's Independence . This fascinating musical artifact, held by Monash University since 1977, symbolises not only the emergence of the nation from its colonial history but also the beginnings of friendship between the Indonesian and the Australian people (see further: Margaret Kartomi, The Gamelan Digul and the Prison-Camp Musician Who Built It, University of Rochester Press, 2002).

The School also possesses a complete Javanese gamelan orchestra from Solo with slendro and pelog instruments called Kyai Slamet , a set of wayang puppets, and puppet screen. Also in the collection is Dr. Made Mantle Hood's personal collection of Balinese instruments made available to students. His orchestra called Genta Semara is the only seven-tone gamelan of its kind created on the basis of an ancient palm-leaf manuscript by well-known gongsmith I Wayan Beratha.

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